Thursday, October 28, 2010

Big Bay Area Quake Likely Within 20 Years, Experts Say

Between 2000 and 2003, five of California's quakes measuring magnitude 5 or greater occurred within about 7 miles (11 kilometers) of the sites identified by the program. The probability of this occurring randomly is about 1 in 100,000.

Virtual California's most recent projections are reported in this week's issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"Our method takes into account the present and past interactions between the San Andreas fault and the other faults in the Bay Area explicitly, and no other method does that," he explained.

Using seismic data from the 1930s to present, Rundle's team modeled earthquake activity back in time some 40,000 years.

The program rocked the Bay Area with 395 simulated earthquakes of magnitude 7 or higher. The recreated quakes occurred on an average of every 101 years.

"Obviously there have been many quakes in the past that we know nothing about," Rundle said.

"The simulation can give us information on the nature of those earthquakes and how they influenced succeeding earthquakes. We can use that information to develop forecasting methods for future earthquakes."

Earthquake Eye in the Sky

Could seismologists someday achieve the kind of simulations routinely employed in weather forecasting?

"Weather is chaotic, but forecasts for 48-hour periods are pretty good," Turcotte said. "Usually hurricane forecasts are pretty good. Weather forecasting has made remarkable progress over the last few decades."

"In principle the Earth is not any more complicated than the atmosphere," he added.

But as with any model, Virtual California is only as good at the data it receives.

"We're extremely data-poor right now, but hopefully in five or ten years that will change," said Andrea Donnellan, principal investigator of the QuakeSim Computational Technology Project at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The next few years could see the launch of a satellite that would improve the program's effectiveness and provide data many earthquake researchers anxiously await.

Satellites can measure Earth surface displacement with uncanny accuracy using a technology known as interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR).

InSAR creates a highly accurate map of a surface by combining simultaneous radar data from two sources into one image.

"Instead of finding out where your car is to within a few meters, you can find out where a position on the Earth is to a millimeter or two," Turcotte explained. "It's a remarkable leap forward in technology."

While GPS (global positioning systems) can provide information for specific points, InSAR can create a dynamic picture of the Earth's surface and map changes and movements for an entire area.

"As new data become available, new observations, [weather forecasters] incorporate them and do what they call model steering, continually updating the model," Rundle said. "That's what we do as well."

But no one knows how much the models might be improved, or if they could someday lead to more accurate short-term quake forecasting.